Susanne Posel, Contributor
Activist Post
In a new study published by the World Bank, there is a call for "stepping up efforts" to meet the global carbon reduction levels to avert catastrophic consequences that would cause the planet's temperature to rise an estimated 4 degrees Celsius before the end of the century.
Alarmists like Jim Yong Kim, president of the World Bank, assert that lowering CO2 emissions must take place before the temperature threshold is crossed and "widespread crop failures and malnutrition and dislocate large numbers of people from land inundated by rising seas."
Kim is trying to coerce sovereign nations to adopt UN mandates on carbon emissions by urging world leaders to become aggressive with eco-friendly planning in developing countries to offset their impact on the environment.
The threat of rising sea levels, a common tactic of eco-fascists, promises to limit the amount of fresh water access, cause drought and unbearable heat in areas not normally exposed to such extremes; as well as promote disease, while simultaneously reducing the amount of food accessible to the world's population.
Rachel Kyte, vice president of sustainable development for the World Bank warns:
Activist Post
In a new study published by the World Bank, there is a call for "stepping up efforts" to meet the global carbon reduction levels to avert catastrophic consequences that would cause the planet's temperature to rise an estimated 4 degrees Celsius before the end of the century.
Alarmists like Jim Yong Kim, president of the World Bank, assert that lowering CO2 emissions must take place before the temperature threshold is crossed and "widespread crop failures and malnutrition and dislocate large numbers of people from land inundated by rising seas."
Kim is trying to coerce sovereign nations to adopt UN mandates on carbon emissions by urging world leaders to become aggressive with eco-friendly planning in developing countries to offset their impact on the environment.
The threat of rising sea levels, a common tactic of eco-fascists, promises to limit the amount of fresh water access, cause drought and unbearable heat in areas not normally exposed to such extremes; as well as promote disease, while simultaneously reducing the amount of food accessible to the world's population.
Rachel Kyte, vice president of sustainable development for the World Bank warns:
The kind of sea level rise we are talking about is going to make the process of urban planning and services to the poor absolutely fundamental. The race to heat resistant and drought resistant strains [of staple food crops] becomes fundamental.In 2011, at the conference for the Carbon Initiative for Development, (CID) the focus of under-developed nations was first and foremost as the BioCarbon Fund (BCF) was discussed as a way to give those nations access to agriculture and energy with sustainability in mind. The BCF is setting the guidelines for countries like Moldova to purchase carbon credits in a scheme to force governments to tax citizens for breathing.
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